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A sprawling, newly built spec mansion located in the Bel Air enclave of Los Angeles will list this week for a stratospheric $250 million, the development team told The Post, which makes this 38,000-square-foot spread the nation’s most expensive home for sale.

“It’s the best of the best,” says Bruce Makowsky, the hotshot developer who constructed the palatial pad, adding that its assembly required a 250-person crew and took more than four years. “This is a curated home for a billionaire who ‘gets it.’ ”

Makowsky says the ultrahigh-net-worth crowd should consider investing in things it can use and enjoy full-time, as opposed to a yacht, for example.

“Why would someone’s toys be more valuable than where they live every day?” he asks. “That makes no sense — it should be the other way around.”

Located at 924 Bel Air Rd., this four-story trophy home, which looks out to views of the LA skyline and the Pacific Ocean, has plenty of room for the sweetest features. Not only are there 12 bedrooms, but while plenty of luxury homes come equipped with a chef’s kitchen, this one comes with three — a main kitchen with Gaggenau and Miele fittings, one for staff, and another one that’s industry-grade for catering events.

The deep-pocketed buyer will also get millions of dollars in fine art, a full-time staff of seven people, two fully stocked wine cellars, a four-lane bowling lounge, indoor and outdoor movie theaters, and even huge tanks of assorted candies.

It should come as no surprise, then, that this residence has other over-the-top features. Among the most striking is an auto gallery — located directly beneath the 85-foot infinity pool — that will house cars worth more than $30 million. How do we know that? Because the cars will be included in the sale — specifically, Makowsky says, 12 cars and 10 motorcycles, with brands including Rolls-Royce and Bugatti.

The deep-pocketed buyer will also get millions of dollars in fine art, a full-time staff of seven people, two fully stocked wine cellars, a four-lane bowling lounge, indoor and outdoor movie theaters, and even huge tanks of assorted candies that line the wall of one of many entertainment spaces.

Makowsky is no stranger to record-breaking real estate. In 2014, he sold a spec mansion in Beverly Hills to Minecraft creator Markus Persson for a cool $70 million — the highest sale ever in that famously tony nabe.

But it’s a big bet for Makowsky to place. In Los Angeles, billionaire developer Jeff Greene nabbed headlines when he listed his Palazzo di Amore estate for $195 million before slashing the price to $149 million. It has yet to sell, but Makowsky notes his home — brand-new construction and fully curated — is a different product.

“This is a custom home built with the latest and greatest [features],” he says. When you walk through it, he predicts, you’ll say, “I’m in heaven.”